One of my readers, Erwin did some snooping on snopes. seems that these pictures are not of Hurricane Katrina. Rather a hail storm in Mississippi - and another reader noticed that the 'tidal' wave is actually a a "storm surge" and comes when the tide is coming in and so is the storm. a tidal wave is any wave that comes with an incoming tide. that can be a huge surfing style wave to a ripple. notice, looking at the photo that the sea there is very rough. that isn't just one wave it's a series of waves in a surge.
http://www.snopes.com/photos/natural/storm.asp
Whoever took these pictures, did an awesome job.
Whoever said, 'awesome and terrifying' is telling the truth. Wow, take a look at this ...
These pictures were made by a man in Magee, MS where the eye of the storm passed thru
- what an experience-
Magee is 150 miles North of Waveland, Mississippiwhere the Hurricane made landfall.
The dance with Katrina, part of her beauty as she left destruction on her exit. They are remarkably dramatic.
The following picture was taken from the third story balcony of Saint Stanislaus College located next door to Our Lady of the Gulf church in Bay Saint Louis, Mississippi on the morning of August 29th, 2005. This is believed to be the initial tidal wave from Hurricane Katrina. The tidal wave was approximately 35 to 40 feet high. When it slammed into the beach front communities of Bay Saint Louis and Waveland Mississippi to completely destroy 99% of every structure along the beach for 9 miles and over a mile inland. The destruction only started there. The flooding that continued inland destroyed the contents of all but 35 homes in these two communities of approximately 14,000 people.
*Thanks, Marion
1 comment:
not tidal wave, it's called a "storm surge" and comes when the tide is coming in and so is the storm. a tidal wave is any wave that comes with an incoming tide. that can be a huge surfing style wave to a ripple. notice, looking at the photo that the sea there is very rough. that isn't just one wave it's a series of waves in a surge.
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